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Capitalism: A Love Story. Culture Columm by Pat Stack (Socialist Review, March 2010)
“Moore paints a picture of the colossal growth in disparity … but Moore remains firmly rooted in the traditions of US radicalism..”

Capitalism: A Love Story – Michael Moore dumps capitalism. By Sadie Robinson (Socialist Worker, Issue 2190, 27 February 2010)
“It’s remarkable that a film showing capitalism as a vicious system – and one that people can change – is going to appear in mainstream cinemas. Instinctive class hatred runs through it.”

Review of Capitalism: A Love Story. By Steve Palmer (Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism!, 9 December 2009)
“Instead of criticism, we get complaint; instead of explanation, we get exposures of excess; instead of education, we get befuddlement; instead of Capitalism, we get ”¦ New Improved Capitalism; instead of socialism, we are offered stale nostalgia.”

Michael Moore’s assault on capitalism. By Dan DiMaggio (Socialism Today, Issue 134, Dec-Jan 2009)
“The significance of this phenomenon – a major filmmaker denouncing capitalism in front of an audience of millions in the most powerful capitalist nation in the history of the world – should not be lost.”

Michael Moore slays capitalism. By Barry Healy (Green Left Weekly, Issue 814, 19 October 2009)
“Unlike his previous films that have focused on particular injustices or inanities of the American way of life, this time Moore skewers what he refers to as ‘the big enchilada’ – the capitalist system itself.”

Searing indictment of US capitalism spoilt by nostalgia for Roosevelt’s New Deal. By Jim Creegan (Weekly Worker, Issue 788, October 8, 2009)
“Reporting over a year ago in this paper on the US presidential elections, I observed that ‘capitalism’ is a word seldom heard among the radical-liberals who comprise most of the American left. Michael Moore has gone a long way toward correcting this omission.”

Jonathan Kay vs. David McNally (National Post, October 8, 2009)
“Excerpts from an email debate between National Post comment editor Jonathan Kay and York University political science professor David McNally on Michael Moore’s new film.”

Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story. By By Joanne Laurier and David Walsh (World Socialist Web Site, 6 October 2009)
“A number of elements in the film are to his credit. First, a genuine sympathy for a suffering population … [but] his film is dominated by an internal contradiction: between the harsh social facts he presents and the paltriness of his political solution.”

Capitalism is the problem – a review of ‘Capitalism: a Love Story’ (In Defence of Marxism, 6 October 2009)
“Michael Moore’s new film exposes capitalism for what it is: a system based on the ruthless exploitation of the many by the few, who shamelessly loot people’s lifelong savings, the public treasury, and kick millions out of their homes. By the end of the film, capitalism stands roundly condemned, however, Mike is less clear as to what he is actually for.”

Capitalism, we’re through. By Brian Jones (SocialistWorker.org, October 2, 2009)
“For people without health care or who are losing their jobs, the love affair with the free market is already over – the question is when they’ll find somebody new.”

Review by Louis Proyect (The Unrepentant Marxist, September 25, 2009)
“Despite its formulaic quality and despite some very dubious politics, I have no problem recommending Michael Moore’s ‘Capitalism: a Love Story’. Since there are so few movies (or television shows) that reveal the human side of the largest economic crisis since the 1930s, we must be grateful to Michael Moore for his steadfast dedication to the underdog.”

America’s teacher. By Naomi Klein (The Nation, September 23, 2009)
“On September 17, in the midst of the publicity blitz for his cinematic takedown of the capitalist order, Moore talked with Nation columnist Naomi Klein by phone about the film, the roots of our economic crisis and the promise and peril of the present political moment.”